Determination of rare earth elements in urine by electrothermal vaporization inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry

2002 
A method was developed for the determination of rare earth elements (REEs) in urine with electrothermal vaporization inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ETV-ICPMS). The undiluted sample was directly injected into the graphite tube and trifluoromethane (Freon-23) was used as chemical modifier in order to reduce the vaporization temperature and the memory effect of most of the lanthanides. The detection limits were in the range 1–10 ng/L with relative standard deviation of 3–5% at concentration levels of 1µg/L, and less than 10–15% at 100 ng/L. Two different procedures, external calibration and a standard additions method, were evaluated to measure the concentration levels of lanthanides in the urine samples and the second procedure was considered to be the best choice for calibration in this work. The level of REEs in urine of 50 healthy volunteers was in the range 5–20 ng/L, above the detection limit of ETV-ICPMS. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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